An electrochemical sensor for ascertaining gas concentrations in gases, particularly in exhaust gases of combustion engines, includes an oxygen-ion-conductive solid electrolyte which is provided with electrode layers arranged at a distance from one another and with at least one resistance heating element that is separated from the solid electrolyte by an electrical insulating layer, a foil binder layer being provided between the electrical insulating layer and the solid electrolyte. At least one electron-conductive intermediate layer is provided between the electrode-side electrical insulating layer and the adjacent solid electrolyte.
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12. An electrochemical sensor for ascertaining a gas concentration in an exhaust gas of an internal combustion engine, comprising:
an oxygen-ion-conductive solid electrolyte provided with electrode layers situated at a preselected distance from one another; least one resistance heating element; at least one electrical insulating layer separating the at least one resistance heating element from the solid electrolyte, the at least one electrical insulating layer including an electrode-side electrical insulating layer; at least one foil binder layer situated between the at least one electrical insulating layer and the solid electrolyte; and at least one electron-conductive intermediate layer situated between the electrode-side electrical insulating layer and the solid electrolyte, the at least one electron-conductive intermediate layer lying directly above the electrode-side electrical insulating layer.
1. An electrochemical sensor for ascertaining a gas concentration in an exhaust gas of an internal combustion engine, comprising:
an oxygen-ion-conductive solid electrolyte provided with electrode layers situated at a preselected distance from one another; at least one resistance heating element; at least one electrical insulating layer separating the at least one resistance heating element from the solid electrolyte, the at least one electrical insulating layer including an electrode-side electrical insulating layer; at least one foil binder layer situated between the at least one electrical insulating layer and the solid electrolyte; and at least one electron-conductive intermediate layer situated between the electrode-side electrical insulating layer and the solid electrolyte, wherein no solid electrolyte layer is situated in a region above the at least one resistance heating element between the at least one resistance heating element and the at least one electron-conductive intermediate layer.
2. The sensor according to
3. The sensor according to
5. The sensor according to
6. The sensor according to
7. The sensor according to
8. The sensor according to
9. The sensor according to
10. The sensor according to
11. The sensor according to
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In the electrochemical sensor described in German Pat. No. 31 20 159, the danger exists that during the operation of the heating element, particularly if there is insufficient insulation between the heating element and the oxygen-ion-conductive solid electrolytes which, for example, can be made of yttrium-stabilized ZrO2 (YSZ ceramic), leakage currents will occur which electrically couple the sensor cell to the heating element. First of all, such an electrical coupling reduces the service life of the heater, since reduction effects occur in the active ceramics, and secondly, the measuring signals emitted by the sensor are increasingly and permanently invalidated. Given continuous occurrence, the leakage currents lead to a local blackening of the sensor. In addition, the thin heating lines of the resistance heating element can burn through due to the local heating. In the case of the known sensor, a further disadvantageous effect occurs because of the interspersing of interference signals from the heating element, operated with pulsed voltage, into the probe signal, whereby the measuring accuracy drops because of the reduced signal-to-interference ratio.
An object of the present invention is to prevent an electrical coupling from the solid-electrolyte sections of the sensor to the heating element during its operation. Furthermore, the intention is to construct a sensor according to the present invention in such a way that blackening no longer occurs during the check for leakage current. Moreover, a sensor of the present invention is to be constructed in a manner that the service life of the heating element is extended. In addition, a sensor according to the present invention should be able to deliver a stable measuring signal over its service life. A sensor of the present invention should also be constructed so that no interference signals from the heating element are interspersed into the measuring-active ceramics, and thus into the sensor signal. A further intention is that the sensor of the present invention be so designed that the accuracy of the measuring signal is improved.
In an electrochemical sensor, designed according to the present invention, for ascertaining gas concentrations in gases, particularly in exhaust gases of internal combustion engines, having an oxygen-ion-conductive solid electrolyte which is provided with electrode layers arranged at a distance from one another and with at least one resistance heating element that is separated from the solid electrolyte by an electrical insulating layer, at least one foil binder layer being provided between the electrical insulating layer(s) and the solid electrolyte, at least one electron-conductive intermediate layer is provided between the electron-side electrical insulating layer and the adjacent solid electrolyte.
In one preferred specific embodiment, the electrochemical sensor of the present invention has a thin electron-conductive metal layer at least above the resistance heating element. This metal layer can either be imprinted flat-spread as a platinum-containing paste at least over the hot region of the sensor, or else can be applied in the form of a platinum lattice structure at least over the hot region of the sensor. Alternatively, the platinum lattice structure or the imprinted layer made of platinum paste can also lie over the entire surface, i.e., over the hot regions and the leads of the resistance heating element.
The platinum lattice structure can have lattice bars running at right angles, i.e., parallel to the edges of the sensor, or else running diagonally at a specific angle.
In one specific embodiment, the electron-conductive intermediate layer, such as the platinum lattice or a platinum mesh, can lie directly over the electrical insulating layer. Alternatively, the electron-conductive intermediate layer, i.e., particularly the platinum lattice or the platinum mesh, can replace or so modify one of the foil binder layers in the sensor that this/these foil binder layer(s) have sufficient electron conductivity. At the same time, the thermal conductivity of the construction counteracts local overheating of the heater.
To reduce or screen off the interference signals coupled in from the resistance heating element, the electron-conductive intermediate layer or intermediate layers, such as the platinum lattice, can be electrically connected to a defined potential, in particular to earth (ground) potential in the sensor.
The heater is sealed off on both sides by sealing frame 2 made of ZrO2. Situated over the heater is a foil binder layer 5, and above that, a reference-channel foil 9 which surrounds a reference-gas channel 12 with a reference electrode 16. Above reference-channel foil 9 and reference-gas channel 12 is a Nernst foil 10, made of a solid-electrolyte body, which is possibly also provided with a pump cell (not shown). Lying on Nernst foil 10 is a measuring electrode 17 protected by a protective layer 18. It should be mentioned that insulating layers 3 and 4 are made of a ceramic material, namely, a mixture of Al2O3+SiO2+BaCO3. Heating meander 11 is made of Pt+AI2O3, and the foil binder is made of ZrO2.
In the exemplary embodiment shown in
This platinum lattice or mesh can have one of the structures shown in
In a specific embodiment not shown in
Deviating from the specific embodiment shown in
only one, preferably upper electron-conductive intermediate layer 13 is provided;
foil binder layer 5 can be replaced by such an electron-conductive intermediate layer;
the electron-conductive intermediate layer can also be combined in each of these configurations with an ion-conductive intermediate layer, so that both electron and ion conduction occurs in this layer. It should further be mentioned that, in particular to prevent interference signals from being interspersed into the measuring signal, each of electron-conductive intermediate layers 13, 14 in any configuration can be connected to a defined potential, preferably to earth potential, within the sensor.
In the following, various preferred and possible structure variants of a platinum intermediate layer 13 are clarified on the basis of the plan views in
The variant of a platinum lattice 13b shown in
The pattern variant shown in
In the case of the variants shown in
Common to all the embodiment variants of electron-conductive intermediate layer or intermediate layers 13a-13g shown in
Eisele, Ulrich, Diehl, Lothar, Jach, Olaf, De La Prieta, Claudio, Schneider, Jens Stefan, Schulte, Thomas, Springhorn, Carsten, Schmiedel, Carmen
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Jan 10 2000 | DE LA PRIETA, CLAUDIO | Robert Bosch GmbH | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 010772 | /0801 | |
Jan 10 2000 | SCHULTE, THOMAS | Robert Bosch GmbH | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 010772 | /0801 | |
Jan 12 2000 | EISELE, ULRICH | Robert Bosch GmbH | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 010772 | /0801 | |
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